In a United Kingdom tech landscape increasingly shaped by data, automation and real-world impact, Oluwasesan Adedeji stands out as a builder who combines deep technical rigour with a clear sense of social purpose. He first joined Emraay Solutions as a technical contributor, became central to its product direction, and now serves as part of the management team and one of the co-founders of Emraay Solutions UK. Through this UK branch, he is architecting digital products that use data and AI to strengthen communities, support small businesses and inspire the next generation of STEM talent – work that reflects both his personal journey and the UK’s wider drive towards inclusive, impact-led innovation.
Adedeji’s practice is anchored in a strong technical and analytical foundation. He holds a Master’s degree in Data Science from Nottingham Trent University and has spent over five years working across complex data, analytics and IT environments in international organisations. In roles spanning energy, immigration, humanitarian work and enterprise solutions, he has designed and deployed systems that materially improved data quality, operational efficiency and decision-making. His contributions include boosting data processing efficiency in the energy sector, improving biometric and immigration data accuracy for international agencies, and helping to shape AI-enabled tools for vessel operations and business intelligence. This combination of statistical thinking, systems design and operational delivery now underpins Emraay Solutions’ product strategy, particularly through its UK operations.
One of Emraay’s flagship products is KNOW – Bible Trivia, a mobile app that has rapidly gained traction in UK faith and community spaces. Launched only a few months ago, KNOW has already seen strong uptake among church groups, youth organisations and families. It is used in Bible study sessions, youth fellowship meetings and community gatherings as a shared digital experience that blends learning, culture and play. What began as a quiz app has become a collaborative tool for intergenerational engagement, giving younger audiences a familiar digital interface while preserving the depth and continuity of scripture-based teaching. KNOW is quietly proving that well-designed digital products can honour tradition, rather than erode it, while deepening participation and inclusion.
Alongside this community-facing work, Adedeji is applying advanced analytics to one of the most persistent challenges facing small businesses: managing inventory and cash flow on thin margins. Emraay’s AI-powered inventory management system, designed for small retailers, convenience stores and micro-businesses, uses machine learning models to anticipate stock needs, forecast sales patterns, automate replenishment and reduce waste. For shop owners who cannot afford dedicated data teams, this effectively embeds a “virtual analyst” into their daily operations. Early pilots suggest that retailers using AI-assisted stock prediction can reduce over-stocking and avoid common gaps in supply that damage customer trust. By making these capabilities accessible to smaller operators, Emraay is helping to close the capability gap between local retailers and large chains.
Crucially, Adedeji’s contribution to the ecosystem extends beyond the products he ships. As a volunteer mentor with STEM Learning and the Engineering Development Trust (EDT), he works directly with students to demystify data, engineering and digital problem-solving. He guides innovation projects, supports young people to frame and test ideas using real-world constraints, and pays particular attention to engaging underrepresented groups – including girls and ethnic minority students – in STEM pathways. This work aligns closely with national priorities around broadening participation in STEM and ensuring that the UK’s future talent pipeline reflects the diversity of its communities.
From rising app adoption in community settings to measurable operational improvements for SMEs, Adedeji’s body of work is united by a simple principle: technology must earn its place in people’s lives by delivering clear, practical value. As a co-founder of Emraay Solutions UK, a member of its management team and a core decision-maker on product and data strategy, he remains focused on building solutions that are not only technically robust but also culturally aware and economically meaningful. In doing so, he offers a compelling example of expert-led, purpose-driven innovation in a data-driven age, where success is measured not only by scale but by the depth of impact on everyday lives.










